Title: Vermont ePrescribing Program
1Vermont ePrescribing Program
- Initial Kick-Off Meeting
- March 12, 2009
2Agenda
- Why ePrescribing?
- ePrescribing Value Proposition
- Feasibility Study Results
- Project Overview
- Goals Objectives
- Success Measures
- Incentive Payments
- Discussion
- Next Steps
- Appendix
3Purpose of Todays Kickoff Meeting
- Determine project scope and objectives
- Identify success measures
- Discuss the incentive plan
- Review draft outline the Action Plan
4Why ePrescribing?
5Health Information Technology
E-Prescribing
6ePrescribing Components Value
Cost Efficiency
Quality Safety
71st Generation ePrescribing
Physician Practice
Retail or Mail Pharmacy
Faxes Rx or Prints Hands to patient
Medical Benefit Information
Practice Manage- mentSystem
A
Rx
Ambulatory EMR
Pharmacy Dispensing System
Rx
Formulary Database (e.g. MediMeida)
82nd Generation ePrescribing
9ePrescribing Market Drivers
ePrescribing
Pressures for Change
10ePrescribing Value Proposition
11Benefits Prescribers
Reduce Cost
- Reduce phone calls chart pulls
- Streamline PA process
- Low impact to existing workflow
- Easy access to medication history
- Decreases potential medication errors due to
illegible prescriptions - Avoid potential adverse drug events
Improve quality of care
Improve patient satisfaction
- Reduced waiting time at pharmacy
- Aura of high tech
12Benefits Payers/PBMs
Improve quality of care
- Decreases potential medication errors due to
illegible prescriptions - Facilitates improved care management
Reduce cost
- Reduced phone calls administrative costs
- Better utilization of generics and cost-effective
alternatives - Reduced medication errors
Improve customer satisfaction
- Employers lower premium growth due to reduced
drug spend - Prescribers Fewer hassles over coverage and
benefit details - Consumer Reduced wait time at pharmacy
13Benefits Patients
Improve quality of care
- Decreases potential medication errors due to
illegible prescriptions - Facilitates improved medication compliance
Reduce cost
- Reduced out of pocket costs
- Better utilization of cost-effective alternatives
Improve customer satisfaction
- Reduces pharmacy wait times
- More predictable co-payment
- Aura of quality modernity
14Benefits Pharmacy
- Reduces potential medication errors due to
illegible prescriptions - Allows for more patient consultation time
- Less delay in getting prescription
approved/adjudicated
Improve quality of care
Reduce cost
- Less clarification phone calls to the prescriber
- More efficient use of time
- Less reversals
Improve customer satisfaction
- Reduces pharmacy wait times
- More predictable co-payment
15Vermont ePrescribing Feasibility Study Findings
16E-Prescribing Rankings
NOTE Vermont Ranks 31st
17ePrescribing in Vermont
- 155 active prescribers (7 of VT)
- 9 vendors
- EHR products predominate
- Minimal e-rx functionality
- Often e-rx not turned on
- Medication History and Formulary and Benefit
Information available on 509,090 covered lives
( 82 of state) - Fewer than 1 of prescriptions transmitted
electronically - VT ranks 31st in Nation
18Vermont Physicians
Data Source VITL 2008
19Vermont Pharmacies
- 146 total pharmacies
- 102 chain pharmacies
- 44 independent community pharmacies
- 95 pharmacies connected for ePrescribing (mostly
chain pharmacies)
Source SureScripts-RxHub
20Vermont ePrescribing Opportunity
- 1 of all VT prescriptions written electronically
- 81 of Vermonters have available eligibility,
drug history and formulary - Only 15 of 44 independent community pharmacies
connected for eRx - The many rural communities creates challenges and
opportunities for eRx
21Project Overview
22Build on Progress and Momentum
- Build on the feasibility and analysis study
completed 12/08 - Take advantage of federal ePrescribing incentives
- Provide on-ramp for certain physicians towards
EHR and HIE
23Proposed Program Governance
- VITL will provide program sponsorship
- POCP will provide program management
- VT healthcare stakeholder/providers will provide
advice and direction - A Steering Committee will provide program
guidance and insight
24Advisory Groups
- Three Advisory Groups will be formed to guide the
program - Prescriber Advisory Group
- Physicians, NPs and PAs
- Pharmacy
- Chain Independent
- Hospital
- Small large
- One member of each Advisory Group will
participate on the Steering Committee - Meet as needed
25Steering Committee
- Steering Committee proposed membership
- One member of each Advisory Group
- Health plan representation
- State representation
- POCP (non-voting)
- VITL
- Meet monthly
- Provide program guidance
- and direction
26Approach (Draft)
- Initially contact physicians with EHR/EMRs that
arent ePrescribing - Then target non-hospital based non-EHR using
physicians - Be a physician advocate for appropriate IT
change. - Explain available programs
- Identify independent pharmacies in most need of
assistance - Partner with QIOs and PROs
27Goals and Objectives
28Potential Project Goals Objectives
- Reduce barriers to state-wide ePrescribing
adoption - Reduce the cost of ePrescribing
- Enable physicians to qualify for CMS
ePrescribing program incentives - Encourage pharmacy participation
- Support Vermonts healthcare reform efforts
- Make medication history more widely available to
Vermont physicians
29Project at a Glance
Progress to Date
30Success Measures
31Success Measures
- Success Measures
- Measures must be identified with success
- Sources identified very early
- Must be able to determine if goals
- and objectives are met
- Must be
- Agreed to
- Measurable
- Available
- Practical
- Comparable (with other initiatives)
32Success Measures Examples
- Safety Examples
- Drug-drug alerts vs drug changes
- Drug-allergy alerts vs drug changes
- DUR alert frequency at the pharmacy
- ADE related ER visits frequency
- Cost Savings Examples
- Generic Dispensing Rate (GDR)
- On-Formulary Rate
- Other
- Total Physicians in program
- Total Pharmacies in program
- Total eRxs
33SEMI An Unqualified Success StoryGrowing
Physicians, eRx Volume
Phase 1
After a flattening of enrollment, Phase 2 3
spurred growth accelerated it
Phase 3
Phase 2
eRxs have steadily increased, with additional
increases observed as Phase 2 and 3 physicians
started prescribing
34SEMI Financial Savings
Total Number of Mail Rxs written by SEMI
Prescribers during analysis period
219,133 Total Mail Spend 32,718,061 Estimated
Savings for Mail Rxs during this analysis period
1,630,349 (4.75 savings) Estimate Retail
Savings 2.11 Consolidated Savings
4.78 Assume 82 average days Supply _at_Mail 24
days _at_Retail
35POCP Client in SE
February of 2009 is extrapolated based on
transactions through the 11th based on a 28 day
month
36POCP Client in SE
2009 is a projection based on current activity
and assumes a constant 9 month on month increase
in volume
37Incentive Payments
38Incentive Payments
- Determine if existing infrastructure exists to
piggyback program payments - Possible separate structure for physicians and
pharmacists - Database needed for tracking payments and
ePrescribing usage - Payments tied to usage/adoption
- Split payments (implementation/usage level)
require database
39Example of Piggyback Incentive Payments
Physicians
Pharmacies
40Discussion
41Next Steps
42Next Steps
- Finalize Success Measures
- Draft Vendor participation criteria
- Define Incentive Payment process
- Construct Detailed Action Plan
43Action Plan
- Develop Action Plan based on Kickoff Meeting
subsequent decisions - Goals Objectives
- Incentive payment infrastructure
- Success measures
- Vendor Assessment
- Draft criteria
- Evaluate demonstrations
- Contract with selected vendors
- Incentive payment process
- Determine if we can piggyback on existing
physician or pharmacy payments - Develop database for tracking usage and payments
- Program Launch
- Execute communications plan
- Execute marketing plan
44- Thank you!
- Tony Schueth tonys_at_pocp.com
- David Green david.green_at_pocp.com
45Appendix
46MIPPA System Requirements
- MIPPA incentives based on use of qualified
systems - Need to use the technical standards required for
use under Medicare Part D to the extent
practicable - Need to meet requirements of PQRI measure 125
- Generating a complete active med list
- Selecting medications
- Printing prescriptions
- Electronically transmitting prescriptions
- Conducting safety checks
- Providing information on lower-cost alternatives
- Providing information on formulary or tiers
47Published Research Practice Efficiency
48Published Research Practice Quality Safety
49Unpublished Research
50Published Studies ROI to Health Plan
51Milliman/RxHub Study
- Objective
- Estimate financial impact of eRx on drug spend of
Medicare providers and the implications for
physician incentives - Summary of findings
- More than 70 of potential drug spend is
controlled by PCPs - ePrescribing has the potential to
- Reduce a payers drug spend inflation by 1 per
year - Mitigate patient customer service issues on up to
32 of prescriptions under a highly restrictive
formulary - ePrescribing has the potential to significantly
lower drug spend on Medicare beneficiaries - Up to 15 of total drug spend on minimally
restrictive formulary - Up to 8 of total drug spend under moderately
restrictive formulary
Source Potential Impact of Electronic
Prescribing on Medicare Prescription Drug Spend,
October 25, 2005, Milliman, courtesy of RxHub
52Outcome of Prescribers use of e-Prescribing
Technology (in-depth analysis of selected pilots)
53Published Research Patient Satisfaction